I find that to get microphonic feedback out of my EMG's I have to physically touch the guitar to the cab and even then it's hard to get. What I'd try first if I were you is the old Ted Nugent trick; before the gig walk around the stage until you find the spots that give you the required level of feedback to do what you want and then mark those spots with a cross of gaffer tape.
Seems to me like you need to sort out this noise issue first. What you are experiencing is the problem that arises when you try to patch over noise with a noise gate instead of reducing the noise at the source.

I find that to get microphonic feedback out of my EMG's I have to physically touch the guitar to the cab and even then it's hard to get. What I'd try first if I were you is the old Ted Nugent trick; before the gig walk around the stage until you find the spots that give you the required level of feedback to do what you want and then mark those spots with a cross of gaffer tape.

What sort of style are you playing, for that sort of sensitivity/susceptibility to feedback? I know I'm full of questions, but you guys know a lot of the stuff I've neglected in favour of learning about audio engineering or other less-guitarey stuff

I admit, it's been a while since I've remembered to do that trick, though I used to do so. Will try doing that as well, although sometimes the setup times are tight and don't always allow for it if there's quite a few bands on.

I probably should add that recently i have been switching in a second amp for my feedback needs, esp for what you quoted - Parisienne Walkways. When I need that level of feedback I kick in a 100W JCM900 combo that's sitting at my feet. A little bigger than a Fernandez sustainer but it does it right.
I'm pretty sure that Gary did the same thing. He ran multiple amps (DSL100's live) and kicked in an extra one before he hit that note.

I think I mislead you there. He had huge problems sorting out the sustainer. It had HORRIBLE feedback when engaged. He had to use separate circuits to stop it(along with 2 power sources).

Oh, I understood you - I guess the smiley face at the end suggested I thought you were being positive about it, I was just thankful of someone sharing an experience with one

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cathbard

I probably should add that recently i have been switching in a second amp for my feedback needs, esp for what you quoted - Parisienne Walkways. When I need that level of feedback I kick in a 100W JCM900 that's sitting at my feet. A little bigger than a Fernandez sustainer but it does it right.

I guess that is a similar sort of method then, is it not? But yeah, in that case I can understand why you would need something to kick in the feedback in a more controlled/predictable manner.

I am probably going to make enemies with my neighbours, but I have the week off work with little to do so I could try and play around with different amp gain/gate threshold combinations I suppose.

Do what I said about the noise problem first. If you can reduce the noise most of your issues will simply vanish.

I will do, though that will be something I get someone else to check, so probably won't be tomorrow. We'll see though; in a way I kinda hope it is what you suggest as possible causes of excess noise as it would save me a few bob I'd imagine! The only dodgy noise I know of so far, and it's one that all my generation of Switchblades have, is the volume pot is a bit noisy as you turn it (i.e a sort of static-like interference, to some degree).

I will do, though that will be something I get someone else to check, so probably won't be tomorrow. We'll see though; in a way I kinda hope it is what you suggest as possible causes of excess noise as it would save me a few bob I'd imagine! The only dodgy noise I know of so far, and it's one that all my generation of Switchblades have, is the volume pot is a bit noisy as you turn it (i.e a sort of static-like interference, to some degree).

Sounds like a bad pot. Next time you open it up replace it.

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Quote:

Originally Posted by DeathByDestroyr

See, it's important that people clarify when they say "metal", because I pretty much always assume they are a Cannibal Corpse fanboi.

Are there any other potential (no pun intended) reasons why the pot would be noisy like that? I only ask, because I recall reading a review of the amp back in 2008 and they mentioned the same problem with the test product they had, so I was under the impression it may be down to the circuit design more than the pot? I'll mention it to the tech though, and get 'em to check it anyway I guess.